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Marcella’s Reward
by
The kindness and sympathy in her tone broke Marcella down. Tears rushed to her eyes. She bowed her head on her hands and said sobbingly, “Oh, I am tired! But it’s not that. I’m–I’m in such trouble.”
“I knew you were,” said the other, with a nod of her head. “I could tell that right off by your face. Do you know what I said to myself? I said, ‘That girl has got somebody at home awful sick.’ That’s what I said. Was I right?”
“Yes, indeed you were,” said Marcella.
“I knew it”–another triumphant nod. “Now, you just tell me all about it. It’ll do you good to talk it over with somebody. Here, I’ll pretend I’m looking at shirtwaists, so that floor walker won’t be coming down on you, and I’ll be as hard to please as that other woman was, so’s you can take your time. Who’s sick–and what’s the matter?”
Marcella told the whole story, choking back her sobs and forcing herself to speak calmly, having the fear of the floor walker before her eyes.
“And I can’t afford to send Patty to the country–I can’t–and I know she won’t get better if she doesn’t go,” she concluded.
“Dear, dear, but that’s too bad! Something must be done. Let me see–let me put on my thinking cap. What is your name?”
“Marcella Langley.”
The older woman dropped the lingerie waist she was pretending to examine and stared at Marcella.
“You don’t say! Look here, what was your mother’s name before she was married?”
“Mary Carvell.”
“Well, I have heard of coincidences, but this beats all! Mary Carvell! Well, did you ever hear your mother speak of a girl friend of hers called Josephine Draper?”
“I should think I did! You don’t mean–“
“I do mean it. I’m Josephine Draper. Your mother and I went to school together, and we were as much as sisters to each other until she got married. Then she went away, and after a few years I lost trace of her. I didn’t even know she was dead. Poor Mary! Well, my duty is plain–that’s one comfort–my duty and my pleasure, too. Your sister is coming out to Dalesboro to stay with me. Yes, and you are too, for the whole summer. You needn’t say you’re not, because you are. I’ve said so. There’s room at Fir Cottage for you both. Yes, Fir Cottage–I guess you’ve heard your mother speak of that. There’s her old room out there that we always slept in when she came to stay all night with me. It’s all ready for you. What’s that? You can’t afford to lose your place here? Bless your heart, child, you won’t lose it! The owner of this store is my nephew, and he’ll do considerable to oblige me, as well he might, seeing as I brought him up. To think that Mary Carvell’s daughter has been in his store for three years, and me never suspecting it! And I might never have found you out at all if you hadn’t been so patient with that woman. If you’d sassed her back, I’d have thought she deserved it and wouldn’t have blamed you a mite, but I wouldn’t have bothered coming to talk to you either. Well, well well! Poor child, don’t cry. You just pick up and go home. I’ll make it all right with Tom. You’re pretty near played out yourself, I can see that. But a summer in Fir Cottage, with plenty of cream and eggs and my cookery, will soon make another girl of you. Don’t you dare to thank me. It’s a privilege to be able to do something for Mary Carvell’s girls. I just loved Mary.”
The upshot of the whole matter was that Marcella and Patty went, two days later, to Dalesboro, where Miss Draper gave them a hearty welcome to Fir Cottage–a quaint, delightful little house circled by big Scotch firs and overgrown with vines. Never were such delightful weeks as those that followed. Patty came rapidly back to health and strength. As for Marcella, Miss Draper’s prophecy was also fulfilled; she soon looked and felt like another girl. The dismal years of drudgery behind her were forgotten like a dream, and she lived wholly in the beautiful present, in the walks and drives, the flowers and grass slopes, and in the pleasant household duties which she shared with Miss Draper.
“I love housework,” she exclaimed one September day. “I don’t like the thought of going back to the store a bit.”
“Well, you’re not going back,” calmly said Miss Draper, who had a habit of arranging other people’s business for them that might have been disconcerting had it not been for her keen insight and hearty good sense. “You’re going to stay here with me–you and Patty. I don’t propose to die of lonesomeness losing you, and I need somebody to help me about the house. I’ve thought it all out. You are to call me Aunt Josephine, and Patty is to go to school. I had this scheme in mind from the first, but I thought I’d wait to see how we got along living in the same house, and how you liked it here, before I spoke out. No, you needn’t thank me this time either. I’m doing this every bit as much for my sake as yours. Well, that’s all settled. Patty won’t object, bless her rosy cheeks!”
“Oh!” said Marcella, with eyes shining through her tears. “I’m so happy, dear Miss Draper–I mean Aunt Josephine. I’ll love to stay here–and I will thank you.”
“Fudge!” remarked Miss Draper, who felt uncomfortably near crying herself. “You might go out and pick a basket of Golden Gems. I want to make some jelly for Patty.”